This Shutdown Is Not the Same as 1995 and 1996…It’s Worse
If 1995 is any guide, the government shutdown won’t be too bad, right? Wrong, says Daniel Gross. Ours is a very different economy.
I’m generally an optimist about the resilience of the U.S. economy,
its ability to bounce back from shocks and power through disasters,
whether they’re imposed by nature, markets, or politics. But today, four
years into an expansion that few people saw coming, I’m more
pessimistic than many about the impact of the shutdown.
The predictions have come fast and furious. The shutdown costs $300 million in lost gross domestic product per day, according to IHS Global Insight. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg last week
said a one-week shutdown would reduce fourth quarter GDP growth by .1
percent. Macroeconomic Advisers, one of the most sober and best
forecasters, said a two-week shutdown could shave .3 percent off the fourth quarter. Neil Irwin at the Washington Post has helpfully aggregated
a bunch of Wall Street forecasts that project that a one-month shutdown
could reduce fourth-quarter growth by anywhere from .5 percent to 2.0
percent.
That’s a pretty big dispersion.
Market and economic analysts have looked back to the experience of 1995 and 1996 for guidance. The stock market actually rose
during those two shutdowns. (Therefore, the suggestion goes, this time
won’t be so bad for stocks either.) Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist
at Capital Economics, told Reuters that “the shutdowns in late 1995
caused Federal spending to contract by 14.2 percent annualized in the
fourth quarter, subtracting around 1.0 percent from overall GDP growth.”
It
is natural to look back and make comparisons. But investment
professionals often note that past performance is no guarantee of future
performance. And there’s plenty of reason to be skeptical of the models
and forecasts analysts are making, whether they rely on data from 1995
or data from 2011. That’s because the U.S. economy is an extremely
dynamic organism. Just as the economy of 1995 looked a hell of a lot
different than the economy of 1978, the economy of late 2013 looks a lot
different than the U.S. economy of 1995. (I could provide a lot of data
to support this claim, but the Bureau of Economic Analysis’s website is
shut down.)
“To a large degree, we’re flying blind. And that’s one of the reasons brinksmanship is so dangerous.”
Think
about it. In 1995, the internet wasn’t really a commercial force, China
was still a minor economic power, and the acronym “HELOC” (Home Equity
Line of Credit) had yet to enter the vernacular. Many of the forces that
define our economic lives simply didn’t exist. I’d argue that many of
the big changes in the way America works make the U.S. economy more
vulnerable to government-shutdown-induced damages. When you look back
over the past 18 years, one of the unavoidable conclusions is that, for a
variety of reasons, the federal government is much more involved in the
economy than it was. What’s more, the economy is now more dependent on
certain sectors that can’t operate at their fullest capacity without the
government being entirely open.
As this chart shows,
the federal government has become a larger part of the economy over
time. In 1995, federal spending accounted for about 19 percent of GDP.
Now, it accounts for about 22 percent of GDP. Entitlements like Medicare
and Social Security, which have yet to be affected, account for a big
chunk of this rise. But the fact remains that federal government
spending accounts for a significantly larger chunk of GDP than it did 18
years ago. So if you slam the brakes on that spending, it will have a
bigger direct impact than it did 18 years ago, for example in the effect
the furloughs of defense contractors is having on the private sector. Politico had a good piece Tuesday morning
about how Charleston, South Carolina, which is represented by shutdown
advocate Mark Sanford, is remarkably dependent on federal spending.
The
U.S. is more trade intensive than it was back in the mid-90s. That is
to say, exports and imports—the volume of goods, people, and services
moving in and out of the country—have risen far more rapidly than the
economy as a whole. The U.S. today is the world’s largest importer and
the world’s largest exporter. You can go look at the data
at the World Bank’s website. Last year, trade accounted for 24.8
percent of GDP. In 1995, it was 18.5 percent. That’s a big difference.
The U.S. economy is now one-third more trade intensive than it was in
1995. That means many more people’s livelihoods depend on trade today
than 18 years ago. The shutdown isn’t stopping trade entirely, but the Wall Street Journal has an excellent article
that details how the shutdown is gumming up the works. It turns out
that dozens of agencies are involved in the process of releasing
shipments for import and export. And many of them are closed or
operating with fewer staff.
“All
pesticide imports to the U.S. have been halted, according to the
Environmental Protection Agency, which must approve them but has had
more than 90% of its staff furloughed. Some U.S. technology companies
can’t fill overseas orders because they cannot obtain U.S. Department of
Commerce authorization to export. Steel imports are stranded at
customs-clearance warehouses awaiting paperwork.
Then
there’s finance. The trend of financialization—the fact that a larger
number of people are involved in moving, trading, and managing money—has
long been documented and lamented. (Here’s a great report from the Kauffmann Foundation on the topic.) In 1995, the financial sector accounted for about six percent of GDP;
last year, it accounted for about eight percent. That’s an increase of
one-third. And as we well know, the financial industry can’t function
without the government. Today, the Export-Import Bank is closed, and so
is the Small Business Administration. That means small businesses can’t
get loans. The inability to get data on income from the IRS is hampering
the ability to close mortgages, including jumbo loans, as Diana Olick
of CNBC reports. The U.S.D.A. isn’t giving out information on pig prices, which means it is harder for traders to trade contracts based on those prices. These may sound like one-percent problems, but they’re not.
Simply
put, there’s a lot of economic activity going on today that might not
have existed in 1995 and 1996 and that is affected—directly, indirectly,
tangentially, inadvertently, partially, wholly—by disruptions in
government operations. Some of this activity may not have been taking
place two or three years ago. All of which is to say that models
constructed based on prior data and understanding of the economy may not
be accurate measures of what is happening now and what will happen in
the next few months. When new, unprecedented things happen, models get
thrown out the window. We learned that the hard way in 2007 and 2008,
when a subprime crisis morphed into a systemic crisis that brought
global trade to a standstill.
This
isn’t to say that a government shutdown is unprecedented. It’s not. But
a government shutdown in an economy that looks like today’s economy is
unprecedented. Even the people who follow these issues full-time for a
living don’t understand the interconnections. To a large degree, we’re
flying blind. And that’s one of the reasons brinksmanship is so
dangerous.
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